Odd, for months I was told it was AMD. And that it was going to be x86, going against what even Miyamoto has been saying for over a year.
Yes, because for 2-3 years leading up to the Nintendo NX, most people in the gaming community actually thought Nintendo wouldn't be crazy enough to make another gimmicky "Wii U 2.0" but would actually learn from its mistakes and make a true, traditional
home console. Later on, rumours started to surface that Nintendo may actually have 2 separate console replacements for the New 3DS and Wii U in the form of a handheld NX and the home console NX. After that, rumours started surfacing that NVIDIA has won the contract for the NX. Right now, the picture is emerging that there may not be 2 separate NX consoles but just a handheld "hybrid" console -- aka Wii U 2.0 with possible streaming or docking station connection capabilities to allow it to play games on an HDTV as well. I would have much preferred for Nintendo to do a separate handheld console to replace the New 3DS and a true home console in a traditional sense. By going with a hybrid approach, this limits Nintendo's choices in terms of x86 CPU/APU design (aka it eliminated AMD and even Intel right off the bat).
Even if Nintendo uses the world's fastest mobile APU/SOC via NVIDIA X2, it's going to be
miles behind the performance of 2017 Xbox Scorpio and the upcoming PS4 Neo. Those 2017 MS/Sony consoles aren't even "true" Gen 9 consoles either but rather stop-gaps between the XB1/PS4 and the next gen, say 2020 consoles. We are already seeing that on the PC, a GTX950 is required to match the performance of the standard PS4, whose GPU is only as good as the HD7850. On the PC,
R7 370, RX 460 and GTX950 are now roughly tied @ 1080p.
R7 370 is very close to the specs of the PS4's GPU. The GPU inside the X2 is unlikely to be even close to a GTX950. What makes it even worse is that the PS4 will be
more than 3 years old by the time the NX launches in Q1 2017. Imagine if Nintendo launched SNES or N64 >3 years after the Genesis or PS1 with overall performance not even as good? It would have been an instant failure.
Even if the NX was as fast as XB1 or PS4, it wouldn't have been good enough since in 2017 those consoles will be related to low-end status (i.e., <$300 tiers) as soon as Neo and Scorpio are out. Chances are the GPU performance in the NX will not even match PS4's GPU. With PS4 Slim, Sony could lower the price to $279-299. Sony and MS have a 3+ year library of games available at discounted prices. Many people have friends who already own PS4/XB1 or both. If my friends/relatives have a Sony/MS console, as a consumer I am going to be more likely to recommend and myself buy either of those consoles so that I could play and share games with my friends/relatives.
Nintendo will naturally have a fraction of the gaming library of either the Xbox 1 or the PS4. Compared to MS,
it will also not have PC play anywhere, nor the 4K BluRay capabilities which makes the XB One S an attractive media device. Another little bonus is that PS4 and XB1 controllers could be used on the PC. For someone whose controller has worn out or just wants a new controller, that's a $40-50 "bonus" by buying either of those consoles. Will the NX's controller work on the PC?
The biggest issue to me with the NX is that on paper it's almost a Wii U 2.0 (gimmicky low-res screen inside a controller), just that the hardware has migrated from the stand-alone unit to the controller; and the stand-alone unit (if applicable) is going to be just a docking station with ports. Sure the hardware is more powerful and it is now integrated right inside the controller, as opposed to having it in the home console box, but this is NOT a traditional home console design.
It now seems certain that Nintendo simply has 0 desire to compete with MS/Sony and is once again going with something totally different. Whether or not it will be successful is too hard to tell but I am not interested in a portable console with Tegra specs. You have been defending Nintendo's choices over the last decade but I don't know a single N64 owner out of all my friends growing up who has purchased any other Nintendo home console since then. Many of us who grew up with NES, SNES/Genesis, N64 have been waiting for a "no nonsense, no gimmicks" powerful Nintendo console, with traditional media, improved online, and 1st + 3rd party support, traditional controllers, and by all accounts the 2017 NX appears to be NONE of those things. Nintendo just constantly makes excuses why the traditional, powerful home console wouldn't work for them but that's because every single console since SNES that they made had major flaws.
After the casual Wii, what many Nintendo fans wanted was a "PS4"-equivalent Nintendo console in
2012-2013, and yet here we are approaching 2017 and Nintendo is going to miss what many have asked for by a country mile! Nintendo simply abandoned the young gamers who grew up with them during NES/SNES/N64 eras and there is almost no chance that NX will bring them back. I sure hope their console sells but it's already off to a horrible start with a focus on mobile gaming in an era of smartphones/tablets. Nintendo is also taking a huge risk with the hybrid approach because many consumers will never believe that a portable console can also be a great home console (and it's obvious why with PS4 Neo and Scorpio slated to come with 4.2-6Tflops of GPU power). The central concept of the NX appears to be a video game console you can take anywhere, but that is akin to trying to create a Jack of All Trades, master of none. The $ that could have been used on the docking station could have instead been used to make a superior portable screen, larger gaming battery, or lower price, etc. The money that could have been used on all the portable components could have been allocated on a superior home console hardware instead. This tricky balancing act almost sets Nintendo up for failure; especially so since how much more powerful the PS4 Neo and Scorpio will be and how quickly tablets/smartphones advance annually.
Nintendo is also underestimating the upgrade path strategy Sony and MS have set up. There are already more than 60M XB1+PS4 gamers. By the time the NX launches, there will be > 70M gamers. Once Scorpio and Neo come out and these gamers can just take their existing gaming library with them, they could just sell / trade-in their old consoles for the next SKU. Instead of paying $300+ for an unproven Nintendo console with non-existent gaming library, why would current XB1/PS4 owners just not trade in their PS4/XB1s for a more powerful console, keep playing all of the existing games and get the benefits of 4K gaming of next 'half-gen'? Since it's taking Nintendo almost 5 years to release Zelda Breath of the Wild, why would consumers care to buy the NX and put trust into Nintendo again that they will have a strong 1st part library? By the time Nintendo has its exclusives worth buying, NX will be available dirt cheap in the used market just like all the previous GameCube, Wii and Wii U consoles. Early adopters already gave Nintendo a chance with the Gamecube, the Wii and Wii U.
Again, Nintendo could have replaced the New 3DS with a next gen portable with X1-X2 and then made a separate x86 NX home console that launched in 2017-2018. Honestly, at this point I'd rather Nintendo just release its 1st party games on the PC. This way they can continue to sell the hybrid/gimmicky consoles to its audience and let everyone else just enjoy their games without having to pay for the hardware we do not want. At least MS got the message on that one! For those who don't want a PC, MS sells their console and for those who want to play MS exclusives, they can play them on the PC. Brilliant strategy since ultimately most of the $ in console gaming is made on software.